Amara Lakhous


Amara Lakhous is an Italian author, journalist and anthropologist of Algerian origin. He lives in New York.

Early life

Lakhous was born in 1970 in Algiers, Algeria, in a Berber family with nine siblings. He graduated with a degree in philosophy from the University of Algiers. He also obtained a degree in cultural anthropology from the La Sapienza University in Rome with a thesis on the second generation of Muslim Arab immigrants in Italy.

Career

Lakhous wrote his first book, titled The Bedbugs and the Pirates, in 1993. It was written in Algerian dialect and published in a bilingual Arabic-Italian text in 1999. In 1994, Lakhous began work as a reporter for the Algerian national radio. Shortly thereafter, he left for Italy following death threats from Islamists. From 1995, he worked in Italy as a cultural mediator, interpreter and translator in the area of immigration. In 2001, he wrote another Arabic language novel based on his early years in Rome, titled How to be Suckled by the Wolf Without Getting Bit. He then rewrote this in Italian, published as Clash of Civilizations Over an Elevator in Piazza Vittorio in 2006, and receiving critical and popular acclaim. The book has been translated into Dutch, English, and French, and was made into a film in 2008.
Between 2003 and 2006, he was a journalist with the Adnkronos International news agency based in Rome. Lakhous is an editor of a new imprint, Shark/Gharb, that publishes Arabic translations of contemporary European works.

Selected works

In 2006, Lakhous won the Flaiano prize as well as the Racalmere-Leonardo Sciascia prize for Clash of Civilizations Over an Elevator in Piazza Vittorio. He obtained the Prix des Libraires Algériens in 2008.